Binge Fringe Magazine

REVIEW: Help Me!!!, FIREBIRD.NYC, EdFringe 2025 ★★★★★

If you’ve spent any time around the Niddry St courtyard this Fringe, it is more than likely that you’ve been approached by a mime who needs your help. If you take them up on their request, you’ll find yourself a part of a hilarious and profound immersive seance game-theatre production that addresses mortality, collective responsibility, and the obsessive pursuit of connection to family history.

As you enter the space you are greeted by a family tree, ending with Levi, who you will be helping to contact his great grandfather who died under mysterious circumstances. Levi himself is dead, and we learn that the dead can’t talk, and so he can only communicate via mime, with the audience acting as his mouthpiece, responsible for interpreting his communications. Over the course of the show, you will help Levi traverse his family tree and be possessed by various deceased members of his lineage who each have unfinished business. Only then will you be able to help Levi with his own unfinished business of finally getting the chance to communicate with his great-grandfather. This production is a lot of fun, with a healthy dollop of pathos that tips it over the edge from a great show to an excellent one.

Creator and performer Leo Lion gives a remarkably nimble and emotional performance, transforming from Levi to each family member with dexterity and clarity, portraying a wide range of family members with an admirable commitment to being understood. They are a charismatic performer, eminently watchable no matter which character they are portraying. They are also a skilled mime artist, effectively driving the plot along without words, and building off of the interactions offered up by the audience.

The format of the production is innovative and deeply entertaining, even for those who don’t typically enjoy audience interaction. Lion manages to foster a real air of community between the audience members, nicely underscoring the themes of family and connection inherent to their work. The influence of Yev Gelman’s skilful direction is clear, as the production remains tightly focused throughout, with just enough breathing room for Lion to react and build upon connections with the audience in the moment. Watching and becoming a part of this production was one of the most memorable evenings that I have spent this Fringe, and I will certainly remember it for years to come. I hope that Lion has many more Fringes in the future! 

Somewhere between an escape room, a seance, and a mime show, Help Me!!! strikes the perfect balance. Interactive, hilarious, and touching, this hidden gem of Fringe theatre is an existential must-see, must-do theatrical experience.

You can catch Help Me!!! at Studio at theSpace @ Niddry Street and Studio at theSpaceTriplex from 1st to 23rd August (not 11th, 17th) at various times (50 mins). Tickets are available through the EdFringe Online Box Office.

Eve Miller

Eve is a Glaswegian writer/director/producer, with a love of history and folklore. After completing her MSc in Gender History at Glasgow Uni, she is excited to chuck herself in the deep end of everything theatre and writing. She has broad theatrical interests, and is particularly interested in queer theatre, new writing (especially retellings and reimaginings), absurdism, and anything that plays with gender and sexuality! Her drink of choice is a spicy marg… or three.

Festivals: EdFringe (2025)
Pronouns: She/Her
Contact: eve@bingefringe.com